A who’s who of Cardassian officers and Bajoran collaborators (Darhe’el, for example) were persona non grata at best, and arrested to face charges of war crimes at worst. I can imagine that, if there were no specific incidents which could be linked to Gul Dukat, perhaps he and other Cardassian officials would be tolerated… But as he was the head of the occupation, I’m not sure this makes sense.
Is the best explanation that this is merely a matter of convenience to normalize relations between Bajor and Cardassia, or is there a plausible justification for his semi-frequent visits to DS9 and/or Bajor in the early seasons? What real historical examples are analogous to his relationship with the Bajoran (provisional) government?
Edit: ‘Bajor’ for the planet, not ‘Bajoran’
“It’s just a station? That stays in one place? How can it measure up to the galaxy-spanning adventures of TNG?”
Three seasons later it had its hooks in me and wasn’t letting go.
Staying in one spot was an asset, it helped justify recurring guests and villains if everyone’s in the same neighborhood. There’s no way the Kazon should have been bothering Voyager after Season 1 if they had been making a bee line for the Alpha Quadrant.
That always bugged me. For a “primitive species, unworthy of assimilation”, their ships must be incredibly fast…
I could think a good scenario where small fleet of Kazon (or other pirate-like enemies) pursue Voyager far beyond where they first encountered, nipping at their heels and causing trouble sporadically… but yeah there’s no reason Voyager should have been always in the heart of Kazon territory.
Add to that the fact that they weren’t a very compelling bad guy in the first place and, well, we get what we got.
Maybe that’s part of why the Borg never bothered with the Federation much? They weren’t actually worthy of assimilation until they started developing drone separation tech.
One of my favorite fun facts to throw at people who dismissed DS9 for that reason is that TNG actually has more bottle episodes (where the ship in effectively “goes nowhere”) than DS9.
To be fair, DS9 had far less to do with exploring space and much more to do with the intense political intrigue of one specific part of space.
Babylon 5 showed a young me that space stations were magnets for trouble while ships had to see what they could find.
As my first lemmy comment:
I wish my dad would understand this. Trekky through and through EXCEPT he refuses to watch DS9 because in his view it CAN’T be startrek. Actually insane.